• About
  • Daily Market Update

Landis Refining Industry News

~ Keeping up with all things Dental and Metal

Landis Refining Industry News

Category Archives: gold

PRECIOUS-Gold prices crawl up as dollar pauses rally | Reuters

07 Monday May 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, precious metal market, scrap gold, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

gold market, gold price, landis refining, landis refining blog, scrap precious metal

landis refining, dental industry, scrap metal, purchase gold, purchase dental scraps

American Gold Coin

BENGALURU, May 7 (Reuters) – Gold prices edged up in early
trade on Monday as the dollar took a breather after climbing to
its highest level this year in the previous session.

FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold rose 0.2 percent to $1,316.62 per ounce
at 0034 GMT.
* U.S. gold futures for June delivery were up 0.2
percent at $1,317.20 per ounce.
* The dollar index , which measures the greenback
against a basket of six major currencies, was steady at 92.547
after hitting its best since December at 92.900 on Friday.

* U.S. job growth increased less than expected in April and
the unemployment rate dropped to near a 17-1/2-year low of 3.9
percent as some out-of-work Americans left the labor force.
* Two Federal Reserve officials who are currently voting
members of the U.S. central bank’s rate-setting committee said
on Friday they were keeping an open mind on the total number of
interest rate rises needed this year.
* U.S. interest rate futures rose modestly on Friday, as
traders still expect the Federal Reserve to raise key borrowing
costs at its June 12-13 policy meeting in the wake of
weaker-than-forecast growth in domestic payrolls and wages in
April.
* Euro zone business growth dimmed again in April but the
picture remained relatively bright as new business stayed
buoyant and firms managed to build up backlogs of work, a survey
showed on Friday.
* SPDR Gold Trust , the world’s largest gold-backed
exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 0.17 percent to
864.13 tonnes on Friday from 865.60 tonnes on Thursday.

* Hedge funds and money managers trimmed their net long
positions in COMEX gold contracts in the week to May 1, U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data showed on
Friday.
* Demand for physical gold barely changed in major Asian
hubs last week even as global prices weakened, while a
correction in local rates in India prompted retail consumers and
jewellers to start purchases.
* The World Gold Council, owner of the world’s largest
gold-backed exchange traded fund (ETF), is launching a new fund
with a cut-price management fee to fend off rivals with lower
charges, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

via PRECIOUS-Gold prices crawl up as dollar pauses rally | Reuters

Visit us at LandisRefining.com

One of the Rarest Precious Metals Hits a Record High – Bloomberg

27 Friday Apr 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, precious metal market, scrap gold, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Iridium

photo courtesy of periodictable.com

One of the least known precious metals hit a record on healthy demand from the car industry and for growing crystals used in mobile phones.

 Iridium, one of the platinum-group metals, has climbed 12 percent this year, outperforming everything from nickel to gold. As the second-densest element and with one of the highest melting points among metals, it’s sought after for its use in spark plugs and glass manufacturing.

 

Read more via One of the Rarest Precious Metals Hits a Record High – Bloomberg

Follow us on instagram

Like us on facebook

Visit us at LandisRefining.com

PRECIOUS-Gold on track for second weekly gain as Syria concerns linger

13 Friday Apr 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, precious metal market

≈ Leave a comment

dental scrap, Landis refining, gold scrap

Weighing in on the precious metal market

By Renita D. Young and Zandi Shabalala
NEW YORK/LONDON, April 13 (Reuters) – Gold prices rose on
Friday, heading for a second consecutive weekly gain on
lingering uncertainty over Western military action in Syria.
U.S. President Donald Trump and his national security aides
on Thursday discussed options on Syria, where he has threatened
missile strikes in response to a suspected poison gas attack, as
a Russian envoy voiced fears of wider conflict between
Washington and Moscow.
Trump, however, cast doubt over the timing of his threatened
strike, tweeting that a U.S. attack “could be very soon or not
so soon at all”.
Spot gold increased 0.7 percent at $1,344.40 per
ounce by 1:38 p.m. EDT (1738 GMT), set for a weekly gain of
nearly 1 percent. U.S. gold futures for June delivery
settled up $6, or 0.5 percent, at $1,347.90.
Gold is often used as a store of value in times of political
and economic uncertainty.
“Donald Trump back-pedaled a bit in his morning tweet
yesterday, but the danger is still there that the situation
could escalate with Russia due to a military attack on Syria,”
Quantitative Commodity Research consultant Peter Fertig said.
“We are back at a cold war, which easily could turn into a
hot war if someone loses their nerve – and in such a situation,
gold is a haven.”

Read more via PRECIOUS-Gold on track for second weekly gain as Syria concerns linger

Gold, Silver Slightly Lower Amid Upbeat Risk Appetite | Kitco News

10 Tuesday Apr 2018

Posted by landisrefining in dental scrap, gold, market, precious metal market, scrap gold, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

gold market, kitco, metal market, scrap precious metal, silver market

stock market

Photo courtesy of colourbox.com

(Kitco News) – Safe-haven gold and silver prices are slightly lower in early U.S. trading Monday. Higher world stock markets overnight are a negative for the competing asset class of precious metals. However, a slightly weaker U.S. dollar index today is working in favor of the metals bulls. June Comex gold futures were last down $0.60 an ounce at $1,335.40. May Comex silver was last down $0.007 at $16.355 an ounce.

U.S. stock indexes are also pointed toward higher openings when the New York day session begins, which suggests better investor risk appetite in the marketplace to start the trading week. Still, traders and investors are wondering if the high volatility in the stock market will continue this week. Such would favor the stock market bears and the precious metals market bulls.

The markets have not reacted significantly to reports of missile strikes on the Syrian military overnight, after weekend reports that the Syrian army has used poison gas on its civilians. Reports said the missile strikes came from Israeli jets.

The U.S.-China trade dispute simmered down a bit during the weekend. Trump administration officials said on Sunday that trade sanctions against China are not imminent and there is time to work out a solution to the matter.

The key “outside markets” on Monday morning see the U.S. dollar index slightly lower. The greenback is seeing a corrective pullback today after hitting a five-week high on Friday. Meantime, Nymex crude oil prices are higher and trading just below $63.00 a barrel.

Read more via Gold, Silver Slightly Lower Amid Upbeat Risk Appetite | Kitco News

Visit us at LandisRefining.com

Will Gold Keep Reacting to US-China Trade War Jitters? – Market Realist

06 Friday Apr 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, precious metal market, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

china, gold, gold market, trade war

landis refining, gold bars

Gold Bars

Will Gold Keep Reacting to US-China Trade War Jitters?

By Meera Shawn

9 hours ago

Trade war jitters?

Among the four precious metals that we’ll be discussing in this series, only gold saw gains on Wednesday, April 4. Gold prices for April futures were up 0.23% and closed at $1,335.8 an ounce. Silver was down 0.84% to close at $16.2. Platinum was down 1.4% and was the biggest loser among the four precious metals. It ended the day at $912.1 an ounce. Palladium was also lower by 1.1% and closed at $918.9 per ounce.

The rise in gold was most likely due to the ongoing unrest in the markets due to the US and China trade war. China said that it would impose additional tariffs on $50 billion worth of US imports. The tariffs would include products ranging from cars, chemicals, tobacco, and whiskey. This made markets jittery, which led the US dollar to fall and pushed gold higher. The sentiment didn’t provide a substantial impact on the other three precious metals.

Gold price versus Volatility Index 2018-03-26

 Correlated moves

The above chart compares the performance of gold to the volatility index (or VIX). It is a barometer for overall uncertainty in the market. The higher chances that we could see weak markets led to a rise in this index.

We have seen that gold has a strong relationship with market unrest (VIXY) (VXZ). The higher the tensions in the market, the higher the demand for gold. As gold is famous as a safety asset, investors often jump to this reserve-for-safety. Though the short-term relationship between gold (IAU) and VIX can diverge in a more extended run, we can expect the two to track each other.

Some of the mining companies that also increased on Wednesday with gold include Cia De Minas Buenaventura (BVN), Eldorado Gold (EGO), Alacer Gold (ASR), and Coeur Mining (CDE). They were up 2.4%, 2.5%, 1.5%, and 2.3%, respectively.

via Is Gold Still Taking Cues from Downturn in Equities? – Market Realist

Precious Metals First Quarter 2018 Review And The Outlook For Q2 2018 – ETFS Physical Precious Metal Basket Trust ETF (NYSEARCA:GLTR) | Seeking Alpha

03 Tuesday Apr 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, precious metal market, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

dental precious metals, first quarter, gold market, silver

dental scrap, Landis refining, gold scrap
Weighing in on the precious metal market

Summary

Gold is the only precious metal that moves higher in Q1.

Silver underperforms and posts a loss for the first quarter.

Continued weakness in platinum.

Palladium rises to a new record high, reverses, and posts the biggest loss in the sector.

Bullish and bearish factors facing precious metals in Q2.

The precious metals sector of the commodities market posted an overall loss in the first quarter of 2018.

The composite of the four precious metals that trade on the COMEX and NYMEX divisions of the CME dropped by 8.10% in 2014. The sector fell by 19.46% in 2015, but in 2016, precious metals gained 11.71 %. Precious metals moved 20.19% higher in 2017 posting its second consecutive annual gain. In Q1 2018, the sector moved 4.08% lower in a corrective move led by losses in palladium and silver. The sector declined despite a continuation of weakness in the US dollar which declined by 2.19% over the three-month period.

 

Read More via Precious Metals First Quarter 2018 Review And The Outlook For Q2 2018 – ETFS Physical Precious Metal Basket Trust ETF (NYSEARCA:GLTR) | Seeking Alpha

Visit us at LandisRefining.com

Steel and Aluminum? Let’s Talk About Gold – WSJ

27 Tuesday Mar 2018

Posted by landisrefining in gold, market, scrap precious metals

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

gold, gold standard, steel market

By

Alex X. Mooney

March 25, 2018 3:10 p.m. ET

I believe in free trade, but I still understand why President Trump is imposing tariffs on steel, aluminum and a range of Chinese products. America’s industrial workers have suffered for a long time, and Mr. Trump is fighting to create middle-class jobs.

Achieving that will take more than righting the last administration’s wrongs on taxes and regulation, a task already well under way. Blue-collar prosperity was eroded along with American manufacturing. From 2000-10, U.S. manufacturing employment shrank by a third after holding steady for 30 years.

Steel and Aluminum? Let’s Talk About Gold
PHOTO: ISTOCK/GETTY IMAGES

President Trump has rightly blamed bad trade deals, particularly those with Mexico and China, for contributing to this meltdown. But the Federal Reserve deserves a share of the blame, too, since its inflationary policies priced out U.S. manufacturers from global trade. Since 2000, their prices have risen nearly 50%, compared with about 25% for German competitors—mirroring the domestic inflation rates in each country. As a result, manufacturers fled the U.S., much the way American families have fled high-tax states.

The solution is to take control of the money supply away from the Fed and give it back to the American people—in other words, to return to the gold standard. Gold gets a bad rap in some history books because of its misuse during the 20th century. This ignores its peacetime record of high growth and nil inflation between 1834 and 1913.

Clouding the historical picture are two fake gold standards. The Depression-era gold standard was constructed to make prices fall toward the levels that prevailed before World War I, with the disastrous result of deflation. Then, under the Bretton Woods version after World War II, only foreign central banks could convert dollars into gold. This deformity caused inflation, which skyrocketed after the Fed gained total control of the money supply in the early 1970s.

Since then the U.S. has seesawed between too much and too little money in the economy. The Fed has the impossible task of guessing the market’s demand in real time. Its performance worsened in the 2000s because the Fed began to grade itself by how its money creation boosted the financial markets. Today many people are so disillusioned with the dollar’s prospects that they have embraced cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

My constituents in West Virginia get little of the upside from the Fed’s money creation and most of the downside. They don’t benefit from speculative investment returns, but they do lose their jobs and homes when the local plant decides to close because it’s too expensive to compete from the U.S.

The current Federal Reserve system benefits elites. The gold standard is equitable and puts “we the people” in control of the money supply. That’s why it was part of America’s founding and has been a key to the country’s long economic success.

On Thursday I introduced a bill that would return the dollar to the gold standard—the first such attempt since Jack Kemp’s Gold Standard Act of 1984. Under this legislation the Fed would still exist, but it would administer the money supply rather than dictate it. Instead the market would be in charge, the supply and demand for money would match up, and prices would be shaped by economics rather than the instincts of bureaucrats.

Like President Trump, I believe that success is again possible for Americans who go to work every day and build things. Mr. Trump’s vision of how the American economy could and should work resonated with voters in 2016. Returning to the gold standard is a way for the president to deliver on his promise of American working-class prosperity.

Mr. Mooney, a Republican, represents West Virginia’s Second Congressional District.

Read more via Steel and Aluminum? Let’s Talk About Gold – WSJ

The Gold Problem

19 Tuesday Sep 2017

Posted by landisrefining in gold, scrap gold

≈ Leave a comment

12By: Edwin F. Gay

MONEY as a useful tool of civilization has been known for more than a score of centuries, but only during the last four centuries of more rapid economic expansion has its utilization demanded a marked development of technical skill and a refinement of theory. This modern period was ushered in with an intensified demand in Europe for gold and silver which was the result of an evident undersupply and which was sated by the voyages of discovery and the American mines. The precious metals poured into Europe through Spain, and as the flood swelled prices mounted until, from the middle of the sixteenth century to the middle of the seventeenth, there occurred a price revolution greater in volume and in its economic, social and political effects than any other which history records. Contemporary observers, casting about for the cause of the violent and general rise of prices, first discovered and roughly stated what came to be known as the quantity theory of money. They recognized from experience that prices tend to vary directly with the quantity of money in circulation. As gold and silver became more abundant and relatively less valuable, more coins of standard weight (i.e., higher prices) had to be paid in exchange for practically all other commodities — most of all for food products.

Read more via The Gold Problem

Join us on facebook https://www.facebook.com/LandisRefining/

Dubai: 10 Things to do – 3. Gold Souk

19 Monday Jun 2017

Posted by landisrefining in gold, scrap gold

≈ Leave a comment

gold soukDubai is known for really cheap gold — but you’ll have to haggle for it. Whether or not you’re ready to buy, a stroll through the dazzling Gold Souk is a must. The stores also offer platinum, diamonds and occasionally silver, and the government keeps tight control over the quality of all the merchandise, so rest assured that your purchases will be genuine. (The same cannot be said, however, of the street vendors outside hawking “genuine fake” watches and “Guuci” handbags.) If something in the window catches your fancy, be sure to barter — persistent protest capped with a walkaway will get merchants to drop their asking price by as much as half.

Read more via Dubai: 10 Things to Do — 3. The Gold Souk – TIME

Gold Outlook Investors Watching $1,300 For Gold Next Week

15 Thursday Jun 2017

Posted by landisrefining in dental scrap, gold, market, scrap gold

≈ Leave a comment

Gold’s renewed momentum, following a disappointing May jobs report, is expected to continue into next week with some analysts saying that $1,300 could be a viable target.

Gold saw a major boost Friday after the release of a weaker-than-expected nonfarm payrolls report, which showed that 138,000 jobs were created in May, well below expectations for gains of 181,000 jobs.

August gold futures last traded at $1,279.60 an ounce, up 0.64% from last Friday, its fourth consecutive week of positive gains.

The rally in gold helped push up the entire precious metals complex higher with palladium posting its highest price in almost two years; September palladium last traded at $835.45 an ounce, up more than 6% from last week. July Comex silver futures last traded at $17.505, up 1% from last week. Meanwhile, July Platinum was the only weaker metal, last trading at 953.60 an ounce, down almost 1% from the previous week.

Read more via Investors Watching $1,300 For Gold Next Week | Kitco News

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Landis

Landis
Follow Landis Refining Industry News on WordPress.com

No Instagram images were found.

Blogroll

  • Landis Refining Company
  • Live Market Metal Prices
  • Sell dental scrap

Landis Facebook

Landis Facebook

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Landis Refining Industry News
    • Join 36 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Landis Refining Industry News
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...